Another
piece of the puzzle concerning India’s economic slowdown
20
April, 2012
Could
the Indian slowdown be the most important (but still somewhat
neglected) story in the world right now? Vikas
Bajaj reports:
…the
country cannot get enough fuel — principally coal — to run the
plants. Clumsy policies, poor management and environmental concerns
have hampered the country’s efforts to dig up fuel fast enough to
keep up with its growing need for power.
A
complex system of subsidies and price controls has limited
investment, particularly in resources like coal and natural
gas. It has also created anomalies, like retail electricity
prices that are lower than the cost of producing power, which lead to
big losses at state-owned utilities. An unsettled debate about how
much of its forests India should turn over to mining has also limited
coal production.
The
power sector’s problems have substantially contributed to a second
year of slowing economic growth in India, to an estimated 7 percent
this year, from nearly 10 percent in 2010. Businesses report that
more frequent blackouts have forced them to lower production and
spend significantly more on diesel fuel to run backup generators.
…In
the last year, the nation’s power problem has grown acute, with the
gap between demand and supply jumping to 10.2 percent last month,
from 7.7 percent a year earlier. In some states like Andhra Pradesh,
where Nellore is, and in neighboring Tamil Nadu, blackouts have
become so common that many factories report getting more electricity
from diesel generators than they do from the power grid, at a cost
that is roughly three times higher.
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